pain management of oral mucositis in children lauren ... › ... › 01workshop_bruckner.pdf ·...
TRANSCRIPT
Lauren Bruckner, MD/PhD
Associate Professor of Pediatrics and OncologyUniversity of Rochester Medical Center
Golisano Children’s Hospital at URMedicineRochester, NY
Pain Management of Oral Mucositis in Children
Disclosures• None
Objectives: • Review evidence-based guidelines for OM prevention & treatment
– MASCC/ISOO Clinical Practice Guidelines v.2 (2014)– POGO Guidelines for OM Prevention in Children (2017)
• Discuss approaches to assess and manage mucositis pain in children• Briefly review recent RCT and Clinical Trials on OM in children
Main Strategies Used to Manage Chemotherapy or Radiation-induced OM
• Oral care protocols• Antimicrobial agents (chlorhexidine)• Anti-inflammatory agents (benzydamine)• Cytoprotective agents (glutamine)• Biological response modifiers (palifermin)• Physical therapies (cryotherapy and PBM)• Anesthetics• Analgesics (opioids for pain management)
4
Main Strategies Used to Manage Chemotherapy or Radiation-induced OM
• Oral care protocols• Antimicrobial agents (chlorhexidine)• Anti-inflammatory agents (benzydamine)• Cytoprotective agents (glutamine)• Biological response modifiers (palifermin)• Physical therapies (cryotherapy and laser)• Anesthetics• Analgesics (opioids for pain mangement)
5
Evidenced-based Clinical Practice Guidelines of the Mucositis Study Group of MASCC/ISOO • First published in 2004; most recently updated in 2014
– The leading clinical practice guidelines for mucositis careLalla, Rajesh V., et al. "MASCC/ISOO clinical practice guidelines for the management of mucositis secondary to cancer therapy." Cancer 120.10 (2014): 1453-1461.
• 7 sections on Oral mucositis (and 1 on GI):1. Basic oral care2. Growth factors and cytokines3. Anti-inflammatory agents4. Antimicrobials, coating agents, anesthetics, and analgesics5. Laser and other light therapy (photobiomodulation, PBM)6. Cryotherapy7. Natural and miscellaneous agents
• Based on systematic reviews of the evidence for various interventions• 8279 articles identified à 1032 for detailed review à 570 qualified final
Evidence Strength FOR AGAINST
Strong Recommends Do NOT use
Weaker Favors Did NOT support
Insufficient No Guideline possible
8
MASCC/ISOO Clinical Practice Guidelines for OM 20149
RECOMMENDATIONS IN FAVOR OF (strong evidence)
• Oral Cryotherapy x 30 min to prevent OM in pts receiving 5FU
• Low level laser therapy to prevent OM in HCT using HD chemo +/- TBI
• KGF (Palifermin) to prevent OM in Chemo+TBI auto-HCT for heme Ca
• Benzydamine MW to prevent OM in H&NC w/ moderate RT w/o chemo
• Morphine PCA to treat pain due to OM in pts receiving HCT
MASCC/ISOO Clinical Practice Guidelines for OM 201410
RECOMMENDATIONS IN FAVOR OF (strong evidence)
• Oral Cryotherapy x 30 min to prevent OM in pts receiving 5FU
• Low level laser therapy to prevent OM in HCT using HD chemo +/- TBI
• KGF (Palifermin) to prevent OM in Chemo+TBI auto-HCT for heme Ca
• Benzydamine MW to prevent OM in H&NC w/ moderate RT w/o chemo
• Morphine PCA to treat pain due to OM in pts receiving HCT
Summary of MASCC/ISOO Clinical Guidelines1. Basic oral care2. Growth factors and cytokines3. Anti-inflammatory agents4. Antimicrobials, coating agents, anesthetics, and analgesics5. Laser and other light therapy (PBM)6. Cryotherapy7. Natural and miscellaneous agents
Evidence Strength FOR AGAINST
Strong Recommends Do NOT use
Weaker Favors Did NOT support
Insufficient No Guideline possible
Summary of MASCC/ISOO Clinical Guidelines1. Basic oral care
• Favors oral care protocols (toothbrushing, flossing, daily mouth rinse) for all to prevent OM• Do NOT use Chlorhexidine (at least not for H&NC RT) to prevent OM
2. Growth factors and cytokines3. Anti-inflammatory agents4. Antimicrobials, coating agents, anesthetics, and analgesics5. Laser and other light therapy (PBM)6. Cryotherapy7. Natural and miscellaneous agents
Biswas, Kumar, et al. "A mediated model of the effects of human resource management policies and practices on the intention to promote women: An investigation of the theory of planned behaviour." The International Journal of Human Resource Management 28.9 (2017): 1309-1331.
Summary of MASCC/ISOO Clinical Guidelines1. Basic oral care
• Favors oral care protocols (toothbrushing, flossing, daily mouth rinse) for all to prevent OM• Do NOT use Chlorhexidine (at least not for H&NC RT) to prevent OM• No guideline about which mouth rinse is best à use anything regularly
2. Growth factors and cytokines3. Anti-inflammatory agents4. Antimicrobials, coating agents, anesthetics, and analgesics5. Laser and other light therapy (PBM)6. Cryotherapy7. Natural and miscellaneous agents
SalineSodium bicarbonate
Mixed medication mouthwashesCalcium phosphate
Chlorhexidine with chemo
Summary of MASCC/ISOO Clinical Guidelines1. Basic oral care2. Growth factors and cytokines
• Recommends KGF (Palifermin) to prevent OM in HD chemo + TBI HCT for heme Cancers• Did NOT support GM-CSF to prevent OM in HD chemo for auto- or allo- HCT• No guidelines for many others
3. Anti-inflammatory agents4. Antimicrobials, coating agents, anesthetics, and analgesics5. Laser and other light therapy (PBM)6. Cryotherapy7. Natural and miscellaneous agents
GMCSF and KGF for other settingsFibroblast GF-20
KGF-2GCSF
Transforming GF-betaEpidermal GF
Milk-derived GF extractIL-11
ATL-104rHu-intestinal trefoil factor
Summary of MASCC/ISOO Clinical Guidelines1. Basic oral care2. Growth factors and cytokines3. Anti-inflammatory agents
• Recommends Benzydamine MW to prevent OM in RT for H&NC (< 50 Gy) w/o chemo• No guideline to extend to RT >50 Gy
• Did NOT support Misoprostil MW to prevent OM in RT for H&NC • No guideline about Amifostine to prevent OM nor others
4. Antimicrobials, coating agents, anesthetics, and analgesics5. Laser and other light therapy (PBM)6. Cryotherapy7. Natural and miscellaneous agents
AspirinOrgoteinAzelastine
MesalazineProstaglandin E2Immunoglobulins
CorticosteroidsIndomethacinFlurbiprofen
HistamineColchicinePlacentrex
Summary of MASCC/ISOO Clinical Guidelines1. Basic oral care2. Growth factors and cytokines3. Anti-inflammatory agents4. Antimicrobials, coating agents, anesthetics, and analgesics
• Recommends Morphine PCA to treat OM pain• Favors Fentanyl patch, Morphine MW and Doxepine MW to treat OM pain in specific settings • Do NOT use Antimicrobial lozenge & pastes (PTA, BCoG) to prevent OM w/ RT for H&NC• Do NOT use Iseganan MW to prevent OM w/ HD chemo ± TBI for HCT or RT +/- chemo H&NC• Did NOT support Sucralfate to prevent or treat OM w/ chemo or RT for H&NC• No guideline possible for any anesthetic nor many other agents
5. Laser and other light therapy (PBM)6. Cryotherapy7. Natural and miscellaneous agents
AcyclovirClarithromycin
NystatinKefir
Povidone-iodineFluconazoleTopical Na
Hyaluronate
CocaineAmethocaine
CapsaicinMethadone
KetamineNortryptilineGabapentin
Summary of MASCC/ISOO Clinical Guidelines1. Basic oral care2. Growth factors and cytokines3. Anti-inflammatory agents4. Antimicrobials, coating agents, anesthetics, and analgesics5. Laser and other light therapy (PBM)
• Recommends Low level laser therapy to prevent OM in HCT using HD chemo +/- TBI• Favors Low level laser therapy to prevent OM in RT alone (w/o chemo) for H&NC• No guideline for LLLT in other settings or for other emerging light Tx to prevent or treat OM
6. Cryotherapy7. Natural and miscellaneous agents
Summary of MASCC/ISOO Clinical Guidelines1. Basic oral care2. Growth factors and cytokines3. Anti-inflammatory agents4. Antimicrobials, coating agents, anesthetics, and analgesics5. Laser and other light therapy (PBM)6. Cryotherapy
• Recommends cryotherapy to prevent OM with bolus dosing of 5-Fluorouracil
• Favors cryotherapy to prevent OM with HD Melphalan in HCT +/- TBI• No guideline for cryotherapy in other settings due to inadequate evidence
7. Natural and miscellaneous agents
Summary of MASCC/ISOO Clinical Guidelines1. Basic oral care2. Growth factors and cytokines3. Anti-inflammatory agents4. Antimicrobials, coating agents, anesthetics, and analgesics5. Laser and other light therapy (PBM)6. Cryotherapy7. Natural and miscellaneous agents
• Favors zinc to prevent OM with chemo +/- RT for oral cancer • Do NOT use IV Glutamine to prevent OM w/ HD chemo ± TBI for HCT• No guideline for other natural agents d/t conflicting evidence
Vitamins A and EHoney
Aloe VeraChamomileKamillosan
Chinese herbalsIndigowood root
Manuka/kanuka oilsOral gel wafersRhodiola algida
Glutamine in other settingsTraumeel S
Wobe-Mugos E
Summary of MASCC/ISOO Clinical Guidelines1. Basic oral care2. Growth factors and cytokines3. Anti-inflammatory agents4. Antimicrobials, coating agents, anesthetics, and analgesics5. Laser and other light therapy (PBM)6. Cryotherapy7. Natural and miscellaneous agents
• Favors zinc to prevent OM with chemo +/- RT for oral cancer • Do NOT use IV Glutamine to prevent OM w/ HD chemo ± TBI for HCT• No guideline for other natural agents d/t conflicting evidence• Do NOT use Pilocarpine to prevent OM w/ RT +/- TBI in H&NC, or chemo ± TBI for HCT• Do NOT use Oral Pentoxifylline to prevent OM w/ HCT• No guideline for other misc. agents d/t inadequate/conflicting evidence
AllopurinolPayayor
RT timingBethanechol
Midline mucosa-sparing RT blocksChewing gumPropantheline
Tetrachlorodecaoxide
Children are not just little adults
§ Children and adolescents are more prone to develop OM-Incidence rates range from 40% to over 80% among HCT
§ OM interventions effective in adults likely similar in children BUT:– Different pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics– Varying levels of cooperation – Different cancers and treatment regimens differ à
• same OM intervention may not work with different cancer therapies • may interfere with anticancer effectiveness
Risk Factors for OM in Children• Patient-related
• Treatment-related
Age Type of malignancy or HCT
ALL, AML, Lymphoma, Osteosarcoma, HCT
Pre-Tx oral health statusPrior mucositisNutritional status
Risk Factors for OM in Children• Patient-related
• Treatment-related
Chemo commonly assoc. w/ OM in childrenCytarabineDoxorubicinEtoposideMelphalanMethotrexate
RegimenDoseRouteFrequency of Administration
Short vs long duration of bolusExcretion in saliva
Methotrexate, EtoposideAbsolute Neutrophil Count Duration of neutropenia
Children are not just little adults
Evidence re: Mucositis in Children Receiving Cancer Therapy or HCT
Pediatric Oncology Group of Ontario (POGO) Mucositis Prevention Guideline Development Group 2017a
• Building upon Cochrane Collaboration systemic reviewb and the MASCC/ISOO clinical guidelines, with a pediatric focus.
• 3 interventions showing benefit à cryotherapy, PBM, and KGF– Did effectiveness differ between adults and children? – Included RCTs of these 3 agents that included some children
• RCTs of any other agent for OM prevention conducted exclusively in children
• Outcomes:– severe oral mucositis– mucositis of any severity– Mucositis-related pain– Adverse events associated with OM intervention
a. Sung L, Robinson P, Treister N, et al. BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care 2017;7:7–16. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/cncr.20163b. Worthington HV, Clarkson JE, Bryan G, et al. Interventions for preventing oral mucositis for patients with cancer receiving treatment. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2011;(4):CD000978. https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD000978.pub5
Summary of POGO Recommendations1. Cryotherapy ok to offer cooperative children receiving chemo
or HCT with high risk of OM à weak, moderate-quality of evidence
• 14 RCTs re: cryotherapy; 12 reported benefit. • Only 1 included children (youngest was 8 yo)• 8 of 14 studies around 5-FU, which is rarely used in children
• Lacks pediatric-specific evidence, but low risk of harm• Inexpensive and relatively easy to administer• Most appropriate for use with regimens that have a short infusion time
and half-life (ex: Melphalan)
Summary of POGO Recommendations2. PBM (LLLT) ok to offer cooperative children receiving chemo or
HSCT with high risk of OM à weak, high-quality of evidence
• Oberoic systematic review :• 18 LLLT studies, only 2 included children• LLLT significantly reduced incidence of severe OM (RR 0.37, 95% CI 0.2-0.67, p =
0.001) and OM-related severe pain (RR 0.26, 95% CI 0.18-0.37, p < 0.0001) • No difference in LLLT by age in the 2 studies that included children (p = 0.90)
• Lacks pediatric-specific evidence, but low risk of harm• Requires specialized equipment and expertiseà Feasibility?• Ideal treatment parameters and cost-effectiveness unknown• Mostly administered intra-orally, but some experience with external
LLLT effective in reducing severe OM in pts receiving cancer Tx or HSCT
C. Oberoi S, Zamperlini-Netto G, Beyene J, et al. Effect of prophylactic low level laser therapy on oral mucositis: a systematic review and meta-analysis. PLoS ONE 2014;9:e107418. https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0107418
Summary of POGO Recommendations3. KGF may be offered to children receiving HSCT regimens assoc.
with high rate of severe OMà weak, high-quality of evidence
• Lack pediatric-specific efficacy and toxicity, but high value based on adult evidence• Theoretical concern that young children have increase risk of adverse effects related
to mucosal thickening and lack of long-term data in pediatric cancers
KGF significantly reduced severe OM in the 8 studies reporting this outcome.BUT the 1 study w/ children = allo-HSCT, didn’t report ped-specific results.
Fundamental Principles of Pediatric Pain Management
Perception and Reaction to Pain is Individualized
Physiologic Developmental Psychosocial
Environmental Situation Cultural
Behavioral Contextual
“Pain is whatever the experiencing person says it is, existing whenever the experiencing person says it does” (McCaffery, 1999)
5 Steps to Ensuring Effective Pain Management
Reassessment
Pharmacologic Interventions
Nonpharmacologic Interventions
Assessment
History
Variables Used to Assess Pain in Children• Physiologic
• Behavioral
• Subjective
· Heart rate · Oxygen saturation· Blood pressure · Tonicity· Respiratory rate
· Consolability · Regressive behaviors· Activity level · Disinterest in play· Posture/position · Disinterest in self
· Child· Parent· Clinicians
Instruments to Assess Pain in Children²Neonates
N-PASS, NIPS
²Toddlers/non-verbal childrenFLACC
²Early school-age childrenFaces pain scale
²TeenagersNumeric pain scale
Neonatal Infant Pain Scale (NIPS)Parameter Finding Points
Facial Expression
Relaxed 0
Grimaced 1
Cry
No cry 0
Whimper 1
Vigorous cry 2
BreathingRelaxed 0
Altered 1
ArmsRelaxed 0
Flexed/extended
1
LegsRelaxed 0
Flexed/extended
1
State of arousalSleeping/awake 0
Fussy 1
Faces Scale: > 6 years
Faces Pain Scale – Revised 2001
Wong-Baker Faces
Faces Pain Scale - Revised
“These faces show how much something can hurt. This face (point to left-most face) shows no pain. The faces show more and more pain (point to each from left to right) up to this one (point to right most). It shows very much pain. Point to the face that shows how much you hurt (right now).”
This scale is intended to measure how children feel INSIDE, not how their face looks
Assessing mucositis pain in childrenChildren’s International Mucositis Evaluation Scale
(ChIMES)S Jacobs, C Baggott, R Agarwal, L Sung, et al. British Journal of Cancer (2013) 109: 515–2522
Pain
Swallow
Eat
Drink
Use of pain med
Visual assessment
Child Reporter<12 Parent8-12 Both>12 Self (child)
eChIMESTomlinson, D., Hesser, T., Maloney, AM. et al. Support Care Cancer (2014) 22: 115. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-013-1953-x
Common Non-Pharmacologic Strategies
Comfort Measures- pacifier, swaddling, sucrose pacifiers
Guided Imagery- music, emotive imagery, special place
Distraction- reading, bubbles, video games, music
Progressive Muscle Relaxation
Breathing Techniques- patterned, shallow, rhythmic
Self-hypnosis/self-regulation activities
Non-pharmacological ApproachesTODDLERS
² Complementary² Massage² Warm/cool compresses² Aromatherapy
² Cognitive behavioral² Story telling² Blowing bubbles² Toys ² Distraction² Art and music therapy
PRESCHOOLERS² Complementary
² Massage² Warm/cool compresses² Aromatherapy² Reiki² Emotive imagery
² Cognitive behavioral² Distraction² Art and music therapy² Favorite toy to hold
Pediatric Clinics of North America, 2007; 54(5): 645-672.
Non-pharmacological Approaches
² Complementary² Yoga² Massage² Warm/cool compresses² Aromatherapy² Reiki² Emotive imagery
Pediatric Clinics of North America, 2007; 54(5): 645-672.
² Cognitive behavioral² Biofeedback² Guided imagery² Progressive relaxation² Journal² Art & Music Therapy
SCHOOL AGE & ADOLESCENTS
Pharmacologic Treatment of Pain in Children
l Local Anesthetics and Topical Analgesics
l Acetaminophen and NSAIDS
l Opioids
l Combination Medications
Topical Agents for Mucositis Pain in Children
² Bland rinses² Saline ² Hydrogen peroxide
² Viscous lidocaine ² Single dose of lidocaine 2% (5 ml swish and spit)² Benzydamine topical rinse² Lip balms, salves, and other coating agents
² No significant evidence to support use of mouthwashes often called “magic mouthwash”
2012 WHO Ladder to Treat Pain in ChildrenA 2-step approach vs the 3-step ladder
It is recommended to use the analgesic treatment in two steps according to the child’s level of pain severity
Step 1: mild pain• Acetaminophen and NSAIDS
± non-opioid ± adjuvant
Step 2: moderate – severe pain• Opioid analgesics ± non-opioid ± adjuvant
WHO Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
Persisting pain in children package: WHO guidelines on the pharmacological treatment of persisting pain in children with medical illnesses.
Contents: WHO guidelines on the pharmacological treatment of persisting pain in children with medical illnesses - Three brochures with important information for physicians and nurses; pharmacists; policy-makers and medicines regulatory authorities, hospital managers and health insurance managers - Dosing card - Pain Scale for children (4 years of age and up) - Pain Scale for children (6 - 10 years) - Wall chart for waiting rooms
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Design and layout: paprika-annecy.com
Printed in France
WHO Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
Persisting pain in children package: WHO guidelines on the pharmacological treatment of persisting pain in children with medical illnesses.
Contents: WHO guidelines on the pharmacological treatment of persisting pain in children with medical illnesses - Three brochures with important information for physicians and nurses; pharmacists; policy-makers and medicines regulatory authorities, hospital managers and health insurance managers - Dosing card - Pain Scale for children (4 years of age and up) - Pain Scale for children (6 - 10 years) - Wall chart for waiting rooms
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© World Health Organization 2012
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#NN�TGCUQPCDNG�RTGECWVKQPU�JCXG�DGGP�VCMGP�D[�VJG�9QTNF�*GCNVJ�1TICPK\CVKQP�VQ�XGTKH[�VJG�KPHQTOCVKQP�contained in this publication. However, the published material is being distributed without warranty of any MKPF��GKVJGT�GZRTGUUGF�QT�KORNKGF��6JG�TGURQPUKDKNKV[�HQT�VJG�KPVGTRTGVCVKQP�CPF�WUG�QH�VJG�OCVGTKCN�NKGU�YKVJ�the reader. In no event shall the World Health Organization be liable for damages arising from its use.
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General Principles of Opioid Management
Ø Keep it simpleØ Avoid mixed preparationsØ Steady pain control works bestØ Reassess and adjust as neededØ Anticipate, prevent, treat toxicities
Constipation ItchingNausea/Vomiting ConfusionMyoclonus SomnolenceRespiratory depression
Intravenous administration of opioids
² Most common routes of administration² Intravenous² Subcutaneous (far less common)² Patient-controlled analgesia used for older kids
² Emerging use of PARENT-controlled analgesia
² Most common opioids utilized² Morphine² Hydromorphone (Dilaudid)
IV Morphine: Start Low and Work Up
Infants ≤6 months • 0.025 to 0.03 mg/kg/dose every 2 to 4 hours
Infants >6 months, Children, and AdolescentsPatient weight <50 kg: :
• Opioid naïve initial: 0.05 – 0.1 mg/kg/dose every 2 to 4 hours • Opioid tolerant: 0.1 to 0.2 mg/kg/dose every 2 to 4 hours
Patient weight ≥50 kg: • Initial: 2 to 5 mg every 2 to 4 hours
Patient Age Max Dose of IV Morphine
Infant 2 mg/dose
Children 1-6 yo 4 mg/dose
Children 7-12 yo 8 mg/dose
Adolescent 10 mg/dose
IV Morphine Administration
1. Start with an IV dose (e.g., 2 mg IV morphine)prn for intermittent painscheduled for steady or frequent pain
2. Determine how many doses needed over 24 hours12 doses x 2 mg/dose = 24 mg
3. Give that dose continuously: 1 mg/hr
4. Add prn dosing: 1 mg prn (usually every 15 minutes)
5. Monitor, Reassess frequently, adjust as needed
“With the current lack of evidence-based guidance in this area, and the existing large variations in daily practice, a CPG could be pivotal to improve pain outcomes and quality of life. We therefore initiated the development of a comprehensive CPG regarding pain in children with cancer.”
https://doi.org/10.1002/pbc.27698 First published March 2019
Identified 5 studies on mucositis pain management in children with cancer
89 clinical questions identified
22 after voting
7 studies Identified in 2b group = toxicity-related pain
Brief Review of Recent RCT and CTs about OM in Children Receiving Cancer Therapy or HCT
Photobiomodulation Update• LLLT (or PBM) recommended both MASCC and POGO
• Ped LLLT reviewed by He et al (2018, incl. 2015 pub)He, Mengxue, et al. "A systematic review and meta-analysis of the effect of low-level laser therapy (LLLT) on chemotherapy-induced oral mucositis in pediatric and young patients." European journal of pediatrics 177.1 (2018): 7-17.
• Recently, several new RCTs in children supporting PBM– Prevention of OM in children:
• reduces OM frequency, severity, and duration– Treatment of OM in children:
• Reduces OM severity, incidence and overall pain, and use of analgesia
1. Gobbo, Margherita, et al. "Multicenter randomized, double-blind controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of laser therapy for thetreatment of severe oral mucositis induced by chemotherapy in children: laMPO RCT." Pediatric blood & cancer 65.8 (2018): e27098.
2. João Batista Medeiros-Filho, et al. Laser and photochemotherapy for the treatment of oral mucositis in young patients: Randomized clinical trial: Photodiagnosis and Photodynamic Therapy, Volume 18, 2017, pp. 39-45
3. Vânia Cavalcanti Ribeiro da Silva et al. Photodynamic therapy for treatment of oral mucositis: Pilot study with pediatric patients undergoing chemotherapy: Photodiagnosis and Photodynamic Therapy, Volume 21, 2018, pp. 115-120
4. Boris SP et al. Photobiomodulation of tissues of the oral cavity for prevention and treatment of mucositis associated with polychemotherapy in children. Pediatric Hematology/Oncology and Immunopathology. 2016;15(3):29-33. (In Russ.)
5. Vitale, M.C.,et al. Preliminary study in a new protocol for the treatment of oral mucositis in pediatric patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) and chemotherapy (CT) Lasers Med Sci (2017) 32: 1423.
6. Ribeiro, I.L.A.; Limeira, R.R.T.; Dias de Castro, R.; Ferreti Bonan, P.R.; Valença, A.M.G. Oral Mucositis in Pediatric Patients in Treatment for Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2017, 14, 1468.
Photobiomodulation Update: Prevention
He, Mengxue, et al. "A systematic review and meta-analysis of the effect of low-level laser therapy (LLLT) on chemotherapy-induced oral mucositis in pediatric and young patients." European journal of pediatrics 177.1 (2018): 7-17.
OM Occurrence
Occurrence of greater than Grade III OM
Occurrence of severe
OM
Photobiomodulation Update: Treatment
OM severity
Degree of OM-related
oral pain
He, Mengxue, et al. "A systematic review and meta-analysis of the effect of low-level laser therapy (LLLT) on chemotherapy-induced oral mucositis in pediatric and young patients." European journal of pediatrics 177.1 (2018): 7-17.
Photobiomodulation Update
16 Photobiomodulation of tissues of the oral cavity for prevention and treatment of mucositis associated with polychemotherapy in children. Pediatric Hematology/Oncology and Immunopathology. 2016;15(3):29-33. (In Russ.)
Moskvin, Sergey, et al. "A brief literature review and own clinical experience in prophylaxis of oral mucositis in children using low level laser therapy." BioMedicine 9.1 (2019).
14 studies reviewed, most included in 2017 He article, except for this Russian one
PBM to TREAT Mucositis Pain in ChildrenAges 7-15 yo (3-18 yo eligible)Multicenter RCT
Primary outcome:• severity of OM day +7
Secondary outcomes:• OM days +4 and 11• pain• decreased analgesia use• adverse events
Diode laser treated on Days +1 à +4• 660 and 970 nm-combined wavelength• 3.2 W peak power• 320 mW/cm2 irradiance• 36.8 J/cm2• 50% frequency• 9 areas of oral cavity treated• 2 consecutive 2-3 min treatments
Gobbo M, Verzegnassi F, Ronfani L, et al. Multicenter randomized, double-blind controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of laser therapy for the treatment of severe oral mucositis induced by chemotherapy in children: laMPO RCT. Pediatr Blood Cancer. 2018;65:e27098. https://doi.org/10.1002/pbc.27098
PBM to TREAT Mucositis Pain in Children
Gobbo M, Verzegnassi F, Ronfani L, et al. Multicenter randomized, double-blind controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of laser therapy for the treatment of severe oral mucositis induced by chemotherapy in children: laMPO RCT. Pediatr Blood Cancer. 2018;65:e27098. https://doi.org/10.1002/pbc.27098
PBM to TREAT Mucositis Pain in Children
Gobbo M, Verzegnassi F, Ronfani L, et al. Multicenter randomized, double-blind controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of laser therapy for the treatment of severe oral mucositis induced by chemotherapy in children: laMPO RCT. Pediatr Blood Cancer. 2018;65:e27098. https://doi.org/10.1002/pbc.27098
Photobiomodulation Update: TreatmentHigh-Power Laser Therapy (Pilot Clinical Trial)
Vitale, Marina Consuelo, et al. "Preliminary study in a new protocol for the treatment of oral mucositis in pediatric patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) and chemotherapy (CT)." Lasers in medical science 32.6 (2017): 1423-1428.
• 16 ped HCT randomize, blind CTàHPLT or Sham– HPLT = 970 nm, 3.2 W (50%), 35-60,000 Hz, 240 s– Treatments daily x 4 from first OM Sx
• Outcomes at days 0, 3, 7 and 11– Severity and duration of OM à WHO OM grading scale– OM-associated pain à Visual Analogue Scale (pain)
Photobiomodulation Update• Intraoral vs extraoral?• Optimal dosing and delivery?• Other new PBM modalities?
1. Anna N. Yaroslavsky, Nathaniel S. Treister et al, "A Monte Carlo simulation of the dosimetry of extraorally delivered photobiomodulationtherapy (Conference Presentation)," Proc. SPIE 10477, Mechanisms of Photobiomodulation Therapy XIII, 104770H (14 March 2018);
Photobiomodulation (PBM) Update
Intraoral• Multiple RCTs and meta-analyses
showing effective– Adults and children– Prevention and for pain
• More complex procedure– Spots vs scanning
• Treatment parameters defined, but not optimal & no dose response
– Dose in children?
Extraoral• Simpler application, larger treatment • LED arrays allow larger surface to be
treated with a single exposure• More comfortable for patient
– especially children
• Requires unique device/treatment parameters d/t skin/tissue attenuation
– Median-centered treatment plan approach?
Anna N. Yaroslavsky, Nathaniel S. Treister et al, "A Monte Carlo simulation of the dosimetry of extraorally delivered photobiomodulationtherapy (Conference Presentation)," Proc. SPIE 10477, Mechanisms of Photobiomodulation Therapy XIII, 104770H (14 March 2018);
Use of KGF for Children Receiving HCT
Alessandra Lucchese et al Efficacy and effects of palifermin for the treatment of oral mucositis in patients affected by acute lymphoblastic leukemia, Leukemia & Lymphoma, 57:4, 820-827, (2016) DOI: 10.3109/10428194.2015.1081192
• RCT• prevention• Ages 7 – 16 yo• ALL à HCT• KGF daily x 3, twice
– 60 mcg/kg/day– 3 days prior to
conditioning, then– Days 0, +1 and +2
• Outcomes:– WHO oral-toxicity scale– self-reported Oral
Mucositis Daily Questionnaire
Use of KGF for Children Receiving HCT
Alessandra Lucchese et al Efficacy and effects of palifermin for the treatment of oral mucositis in patients affected by acute lymphoblastic leukemia, Leukemia & Lymphoma, 57:4, 820-827, (2016) DOI: 10.3109/10428194.2015.1081192
Use of KGF for Children Receiving HCT
Alessandra Lucchese et al Efficacy and effects of palifermin for the treatment of oral mucositis in patients affected by acute lymphoblastic leukemia, Leukemia & Lymphoma, 57:4, 820-827, (2016) DOI: 10.3109/10428194.2015.1081192
• Decrease duration of severe OM • Less mucosal pain• Decreased use of narcotics • Improved ability to
– Sleep– Swallow– Drink– Eat– Talk– General Quality of life
Thank You!
Email: [email protected]
1. Basic oral care• Favors oral care protocols (toothbrushing, flossing, daily mouth rinse) for all to prevent OM• Do NOT use Chlorhexidine (at least not for H&NRT) to prevent OM• No guideline about which mouth rinse is best, but use of anything regularly better than none
2. Growth factors and cytokines• Recommends KGF (Palifermin) to prevent OM in HD chemo + TBI auto-HCT for heme Cancers• Did NOT support GM-CSF to prevent OM in HD chemo for auto- or allo- HCT• No guidelines for many others
3. Anti-inflammatory agents• Recommends Benzydamine mouthwash to prevent OM in RT for H&NC (< 50 Gy) w/o chemo
• But no guideline for >50 Gy• Do NOT use Misoprostil MW to prevent OM in RT for H&NC • No guideline about Amifostine to prevent OM nor others
4. Antimicrobials, coating agents, anesthetics, and analgesics• Recommends Morphine PCA; Favors Fentanyl patch, Morphine and Doxepine MW to treat OM pain • Do NOT use Antimicrobial lozenge & pastes (PTA, BCoG) or Iseganan MW to prevent OM w/ RT for H&NC• Did NOT support Sucralfate to prevent or treat OM w/ chemo or RT for H&NC• No guideline possible for any anesthetic nor many other agents
5. Laser and other light therapy (PBM)• Recommends LLLT to prevent OM in HCT and Favors LLLT to prevent OM in RT alone for H&NC• No guideline for LLLT in other settings or for other emerging light Tx to prevent or treat OM
6. Cryotherapy• Recommends cryotherapy to prevent OM w/ 5-FU; Favors it to prevent OM w HD Melphalan in HCT +/- TBI• No guideline for cryotherapy in other settings due to inadequate evidence
7. Natural and miscellaneous agents• Favors zinc to prevent OM with chemo +/- RT for oral cancer • Do NOT use IV Glutamine, Pilocarpine, or Pentoxyfyline to prevent OM w/ HD chemo ± TBI for HCT• Do NOT use Pilocarpine to prevent OM w/ RT +/- TBI in H&NC• No guideline for many other natural and miscellaneous agents d/t inadequate/conflicting evidence